7 research outputs found

    Penetrating Ureteral Trauma.

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    The purpose of this series is to report our experience in managing ureteral trauma, focusing on the importance of early diagnosis, correct treatment, and the impact of associated injuries on the management and morbid-mortality. From January 1994 to December 2002, 1487 laparotomies for abdominal trauma were performed and 20 patients with ureteral lesions were identified, all of them secondary to penetrating injury. Medical charts were analyzed as well as information about trauma mechanisms, diagnostic routine, treatment and outcome. All patients were men. Mean age was 27 years. The mechanisms of injury were gunshot wounds in 18 cases (90%) and stab wounds in two (10%). All penetrating abdominal injuries had primary indication of laparotomy, and neither excretory urography nor computed tomography were used in any case before surgery. The diagnosis of ureteric injury was made intra-operatively in 17 cases (85%). Two ureteral injuries (10%) were initially missed. All patients had associated injuries. The treatment was dictated by the location, extension and time necessary to identify the injury. The overall incidence of complications was 55%. The presence of shock on admission, delayed diagnosis, Abdominal Trauma Index > 25, Injury Severity Score > 25 and colon injuries were associated to a high complication rate, however, there was no statistically significant difference. There were no mortalities in this group. A high index of suspicion is required for diagnosis of ureteral injuries. A thorough exploration of all retroperitoneal hematoma after penetrating trauma should be an accurate method of diagnosis; even though it failed in 10% of our cases.33142-8, discussion 149-5

    Quantification of 3α-hydroxytibolone in human plasma by high performance liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-ESI-MS/MS): Application in a bioequivalence study in healthy postmenopausal volunteers

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    Abstract A sensitive, specific and fast method to quantify 3α-hydroxytibolone in human plasma using deuterated 3α-hydroxytibolone (d5) as internal standard is described. The analyte and the internal standard were extracted from plasma (900 μL) by liquid-liquid extraction using ethyl ether/hexane (50/50, v/v) and ammonium hydroxide (50%). The extracts were analyzed by high performance liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry without derivatization. Chromatography was performed isocratically on a Gemini-NX™ C18 5 μm (150 × 4.6 mm i. d.) column. The method had a chromatographic run time of 3.75 min and a linear calibration curve over the range 1–100 ng/mL. The limit of quantification validated was 1 ng/mL. This method was used to assess the bioequivalence between two different tibolone oral formulations: Livolon (1.25 mg tablet) provided by Biolab Sanus Farmaceutica (Brazil), as the test formulation, and Libiam™ (1.25 mg tablet) produced by Libbs Farmaceutica (Brazil), as the reference formulation. A single 3.75 mg dose of each formulation was administered to 46 postmenopausal female healthy volunteers. The study was conducted in an open, randomized, two-period crossover balanced design with a 2 week washout interval between the doses. The 90% confidence interval for Cmax, AUC(0-last) and AUC(0-inf) individual test/reference ratios were 97.48–111.51, 95.35–103.20 and 96.42–103.86, respectively. It is concluded that Livolon (1.25 mg tablet) is bioequivalent to Libiam™ (1.25 mg tablet), with regards to both rate and extent of absorption

    Clinical presentation of juvenile Huntington disease

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    OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical presentation a group of patients with juvenile onset of Huntington disease. METHOD: All patients were interviewed following a structured clinical questioner. Patients were genotyped for the trinucleotide cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) repeat in the Huntington Disease gene. High resolution brain MRI was performed in all patients. RESULTS: We identified 4 patients with juvenile onset of disease among 50 patients with Huntington disease followed prospectively in our Neurogenetics clinic. Age at onset varied from 3 to 13 years, there were 2 boys, and 3 patients had a paternal inheritance of the disease. Expanded Huntington disease allele sizes varied from 41 to 69 trinucleotide repeats. The early onset patients presented with rigidity, bradykinesia, dystonia, dysarthria, seizures and ataxia. MRI showed severe volume loss of caudate and putamen nuclei (p=0.001) and reduced cerebral and cerebellum volumes (p=0.01). CONCLUSION: 8% of Huntington disease patients seen in our clinic had juvenile onset of the disease. They did not present with typical chorea as seen in adult onset Huntington disease. There was a predominance of rigidity and bradykinesia. Two other important clinical features were seizures and ataxia, which related with the imaging findings of early cortical atrophy and cerebellum volume loss
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